New modelling opportunities

Wolf | January 4th, 2010 - 13:43

For a series of photographs for my portfolio I need female models aged between late 20s and 40.

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No sex please, I’m a model

Wolf | December 14th, 2009 - 13:34
No sex please, I'm a model. Photography by Wolf Kettler.

No sex please, I’m a model. An attempt at preserving a model’s reputation, which had never been damaged in the first place.

Modelling opportunities January 2010 (female models aged thirties)

Wolf | December 14th, 2009 - 08:27

For photographs for my own self-promotion (portfolio, etc.) I need female models in their thirties.

Requirements:

  • No height restrictions
  • Need to be slim (not thin)
  • Fit and healthy looking
  • Good skin

Previous modelling experience is not necessarily required but you should be able to move confidently. All photographs are clothed.

This photo session is not for time. You will be paid and I may give a few digital images as an extra. The photo session will take place at my studio in January 2010 and will take two to three hours. A make-up artist will be available.

Please apply through my website – use this link.

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A portfolio for two life models

Wolf | November 23rd, 2009 - 08:46
Nude couple life modelling photo session

A nude couple photo session for two life models.

Ban on upfront model fees planned

Wolf | November 12th, 2009 - 09:01

The BBC reports this morning that modelling agencies would be banned from charging upfront fees, under government plans to be announced later today.

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Alex B. and la petite mort

Wolf | November 3rd, 2009 - 11:03

You may have seen the photo session preview on this blog, here are more photographs from my photo session with 49-year-old Italian-born model and mother of one, Alex B.

Alex is a life model, posing for artists to draw, sketch, paint, sculpt, etc., “from life”. I had worked with her once before. With this photo session, I wanted to take first steps towards a new idea and needed to work with somebody, whom I already knew, liked and trusted.

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Models – Ask a question

Wolf | November 2nd, 2009 - 13:40

Model Career Advice: Your questions about a career in modelling answered. Wolf Kettler Photographer supports undiscovered modelling talent.

Wolf’s Models Guide, aims to answer many questions aspiring models may have, from how to act like a pro to marketing for models and how to avoid the many modelling scams.

If you have a question, which you cannot find answered in the models guide, you may post it here as a “comment”.

Be sure to mention your age and in which country you are based.

I do not comment on individual agencies and my advice should not be understood as referring to any one agency.

All comments represent the views of the individual authors. This website and its owners will not be held liable for any views expressed or comments posted.

If you are a photographer, experienced model, model agent or other industry insider, please feel free to comment on questions.

You will find the comments box at the bottom of this page.

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Photo session preview Alex B.

Wolf | October 19th, 2009 - 18:59
Alex B. by Wolf Kettler

A mini preview of today’s photo session with life model Alex B.

German Brigitte magazine bans professional models

Wolf | October 7th, 2009 - 10:16

German Brigitte magazine bans professional modelsBrigitte is one of the biggest and most popular publications for women in Germany. The magazine is a blend of fashion, beauty, health, family and lifestyle, less glossy and more organic than its international competitors.

Now, Brigitte has announced its “ohne Models” (without models) campaign. From next year, all their editorial photo shoots will use amateur models. Brigitte says that fashion has changed, women have changed, the world around us has changed and therefore they want to start a revolution. Something along the lines of real fashion and real beauty with real models for real people. It is hard to tell whether the campaign is a mere marketing stunt or indicates a genuine shift.

I suspect that the term “amateur” is being used as a concept for a more real look. New opportunities could open up to models, who up until now have found little work because they do not conform to today’s standard model proportions.

The announcement has been promptly criticised by some figures in the fashion industry for the simple reason that any item of clothing looks good on a barely three-dimensional model. One fashion insider claimed that women did not want to look at real women in magazines when, in fact, the most voiced criticisms from women concern body shape and age. The fashion industry’s fantasy body ideals are disrespectful to women, who do not (want to) conform to those artificially created ideals.

Many photographers, too, I suspect, will be less than enthusiastic. It is much easier to work with professional models of standard specifications. They are a known quantity and you know exactly what you get. With amateur models, you have to work much harder.

Ultimately, though, and from experience, working with amateur models is much more satisfying. I photograph people for a living. My clients come to me because they want to look good but remain themselves. I think that Brigitte’s announcement is really exciting, not just for women but for everybody. Women (men too, but not quite as much) are constantly expected to conform to ideals, which hardly anybody can match. Most annoyingly, looks seem to overrule personality, intellect and individuality.

Perhaps the most interesting aspect of Brigitte’s announcement is the fact that it promotes precisely the kind of individuality that commerce is trying to eliminate. To a greed based business community, which forms the basis of today’s society, only standardised products are profitable. A standard product with few variations means cheap production and high profits. Standard products, in turn, require standardised consumers, who are all content with buying the same or virtually indistinguishable products.

Client studio portrait without digital retouching

Client studio portrait without digital retouching

In my own work, I have always known that no one person is like another. My bespoke portraiture aims at expressing not someone’s looks but their personality. I believe that everybody is beautiful, it just depends on how you look at them.

In practise, this means that I have to work a bit harder than many photographers, who compete in the same market. To tailor a photo session to a client, I have to reject standard poses and set-ups, and I cannot re-use ideas over and over. I find out about my clients and their requirements and plan individual photo sessions accordingly.

Photographers need to show examples of their work to prospective clients. Nobody wants to commission a photographer, whose work they have not seen, nor should they. Around 80% of my work is for private clients. For clothed portraiture, I like to have examples of actual commissions in my portfolio. It is the only way of truthfully showing prospective clients what I am capable of doing for them. For lingerie and nude portraits, which accounts for nearly half of all my private client work, I have to use models in my portfolio. These models, too, are more often than not amateurs. When they are professional or part-time models, I like to use life models. So-called, because models pose – usually naked – for an artist to draw, paint, sculpt, etc., “from life”. In photography, life models are as close to “real” people as you can get without using amateurs.

One can only hope that Brigitte will also go easy on the digital retouching and the skin smoothing, which produces the ugly plastic skin effect that is so fashionable at the moment and faces far removed from reality.

Let us see the imperfections, too, and let us remember that imperfections are always only perceived. In any case, we all have them.

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Photo session preview Phil Holden

Wolf | October 5th, 2009 - 11:54

I met with professional actor and life model Phil Holden for a photo session on 1 October 09 at my studio. Phil describes himself as a “little man with a big heart”.

Little, because Phil is a dwarf. Dwarfism is officially considered a disability but Phil says that he has turned his stature into an asset. Actors are often chosen on looks, he says, and body height is therefore just another physical characteristic in the looks department.

Phil can do some pretty menacing facial expressions, which is highly amusing because he is a thoroughly nice, decent and easy to get on with person. We had a lot of fun creating the photographs, even though we never got to do the outdoor shots that I had planned because the sun was too bright.

Phil is a trained actor, who has worked in film (Harry Potter, for instance), television, music and on the theatre stage. He is an accomplished model, who is very talented at realising the photographer’s ideas.

Phil Holden’s official website

Please note that some photographs in this slideshow contain nudity and are intended for an adult audience only.

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